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In May 2006, [[internet service providers]] in [[Bonaire]] started boycotting GeenStijl after the blog had published secret and private documents of Bonairean [[public prosecutor]] Ernst Wesselius. GeenStijl claims it obtained the documents via the [[peer to peer|P2P]] software [[Limewire]], although investigators did not find this software on Wesselius's computer (but since Limewire runs on the more general [[Gnutella]] P2P network, he may have had any other software application that connects to Gnutella as well). The ISPs stated that "this is a one time action, because the publication has infringed our sense of ethics". [http://www.elsevier.nl/nieuws/laatste_24_uur/nieuwsbericht/asp/artnr/99033/] Access to the site from Bonaire has since been restored.
In May 2006, [[internet service providers]] in [[Bonaire]] started boycotting GeenStijl after the blog had published secret and private documents of Bonairean [[public prosecutor]] Ernst Wesselius. GeenStijl claims it obtained the documents via the [[peer to peer|P2P]] software [[Limewire]], although investigators did not find this software on Wesselius's computer (but since Limewire runs on the more general [[Gnutella]] P2P network, he may have had any other software application that connects to Gnutella as well). The ISPs stated that "this is a one time action, because the publication has infringed our sense of ethics". [http://www.elsevier.nl/nieuws/laatste_24_uur/nieuwsbericht/asp/artnr/99033/] Access to the site from Bonaire has since been restored.


GeenStijl had started working on the television program SteenGeyl with public broadcaster [[BNN (television)|BNN]] in 2007. GeenStijl founder Weesie stated that they were to spend "tax payer's money." However, a dispute arose over the timeslot in which the program was to be broadcasted, and production was halted.[http://www.fembusiness.nl/fembusiness/content/nieuws/775/article.html]
GeenStijl had started working on the television program SteenGeyl with public broadcaster [[BNN (television)|BNN]] in 2007. GeenStijl founder Weesie stated that they were to spend "tax payer's money." However, a dispute arose over the timeslot in which the program was to be broadcasted, and production was halted.[http://www.fembusiness.nl/fembusiness/content/nieuws/775/article.html] Two years later they started a succesful campaign to get their own public broadcasting organisation under the name [[PowNed]], which begins broadcasting on [[Television in the Netherlands#Public Channels|Dutch public television]] in September 2010.


== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 18:42, 8 December 2009

Geenstijl
Type of site
Blog
Available inDutch
OwnerTelegraaf Media Groep
CommercialYes
RegistrationOptional

GeenStijl.nl is a Dutch blog founded in April 2003. The logos it uses on its website are a female silhouette utilizing a chainsaw and a crown within a circle, both in a pinkish colour, although the crown in a circle is green with a black edge when it is embedded in online videos. In Dutch, the term "geen stijl" is used to describe an act by a person or organisation that lacks style or manners.

GeenStijl often uses a provocative tone when referring to other internet sites and blogs. Readers are encouraged to comment on other people websites (such as the one of GroenLinks-politician Femke Halsema) or to sabotage online polls, skewing the results. Geenstijl is known for its hoaxes. Famously, in March 2005 GeenStijl launched a plan to unseat the second Balkenende cabinet. GeenStijl announced on their website that they would bus people from all over the country to Rotterdam, where one of the cabinet parties was holding a convention. These people could sign up as new party members at the convention, and vote against the party's participation in the cabinet. This hoax created a media uproar; even the respectable newsbroadcast of the public television reported the event.

The blog attracts around 75,000 visitors each day and is one of the top 10 news sites of the Netherlands. On March 17 2006, the Telegraaf Media Group took a 40% interest in GeenStijl. The editorial team of Dominique Weesie and Ambroos Wiegers both owned 50% of the shares, against 30% after the takeover. The deal was claimed to be worth €2.6 million.

Dominique Weesie said that he saw a market for a market for a tough-talking, politically incorrect blog, when he started GeenStijl in 2003, because existing blogs used language that was too vulgar for the mainstream media. One feature of the blog is the use of intentionally misspelt four-letter words to reduce their shock effect. The site has been criticized for the xenophobic and extreme nature of the comments it allows readers to post. Anti-islamic and anti-immigrant comments are stimulated by the selection and the presentation of its topics. Both the editors and the readers of GeenStijl have invented a wide range of names to refer to immigrants to the Netherlands that are generally considered to be stereotypic and derisive. The blog aims to be a right-wing equivalent of the British tabloids, confirming the prejudice of its readers and thus provoking loads of comments. In combination with Weesie's network, who had been a reporter for the major Dutch newspaper "de Telegraaf" for more than 10 years, this has proven a successful formula.[1]

In May 2006, internet service providers in Bonaire started boycotting GeenStijl after the blog had published secret and private documents of Bonairean public prosecutor Ernst Wesselius. GeenStijl claims it obtained the documents via the P2P software Limewire, although investigators did not find this software on Wesselius's computer (but since Limewire runs on the more general Gnutella P2P network, he may have had any other software application that connects to Gnutella as well). The ISPs stated that "this is a one time action, because the publication has infringed our sense of ethics". [1] Access to the site from Bonaire has since been restored.

GeenStijl had started working on the television program SteenGeyl with public broadcaster BNN in 2007. GeenStijl founder Weesie stated that they were to spend "tax payer's money." However, a dispute arose over the timeslot in which the program was to be broadcasted, and production was halted.[2] Two years later they started a succesful campaign to get their own public broadcasting organisation under the name PowNed, which begins broadcasting on Dutch public television in September 2010.

Notes

See also